Archaeologists claim discovery of first tomb of an Aztec ruler in Mexico City

London, June 11 (ANI): Archaeologists, exploring a site opened up by earthquake damage, believe that they have found the first tomb of an Aztec ruler in Mexico City, which promises to yield one of antiquity’s great treasures.

According to a report in The Times, if archaeologists are right, the site may yield one of the great treasures of antiquity, the sort of haul that fires the imagination of people far beyond academic circles.

None of the finds has been put on public display but Britain will get an early preview.

Fourteen gold objects from the site will feature in the British Museum’s exhibition on Moctezuma II, the last great Aztec ruler.

These could prove to be the early pickings of a much richer harvest.

“There is no question that this has the potential to be a once-in-a-generation find,” said Colin McEwan, head of the British Museum’s Americas section.

The dig is in the middle of what was the Aztec capital, Tenochtitlan. Near by stands the Catedral Metropolitana de la Asuncion de Maria, which was built from the stones of Moctezuma’s Templo Mayor, which was destroyed by the Spanish in 1521.

The temple’s ruins were subsequently lost for nearly five centuries and discovered only by accident in 1978.

Colonial buildings built around it made further exploration difficult, but an earthquake in 1985 cleared the way for the present dig.

The new finds appear to be offerings left at the entrance to a tomb. Among them is a fearsome stone sculpture of Tlaltecuhtli, goddess of the Earth.

Dr Lorenzo Lopez Lujan, who discovered it, thinks that it is a capstone to a burial chamber.

When archaeologists moved the sculpture in 2007, they found four containers filled with more than 3,000 items, including animal skeletons, a fire god sculpture, blocks of incense and wooden masks.

Next to this, they detected what looks like an entrance.

Electronic checks indicate that there is an anomaly beyond it, which Dr Lopez Lujan believes is a royal tomb, although some suggest it may be the equivalent of an ancient Greek bothro, where offerings to the underworld were placed.

Gold was not especially significant for the Aztecs in religious terms, but it was associated with the nobility, another hint that there is a ruler behind the entrance. (ANI)